China Panda Facts

Giant Panda as distinguished from lesser panda. As it is more widely recognized, when people speak about panda now generally they are refering to the giant panda.

Scientific Name:

Ailuropoda melanoleuca, bear family

Color:

Normally black and white. Complete white ones have been found in the wild. All four sightings were in the
Shaanxi Foping Nature Reserve in Qinling Mountains. The first brown-white one was found there too.

Length of Adult Giant Panda:

120-180cm (about 3.9-5.9 feet)

Weight of Adult Giant Panda:

80-125kg (about 176-276 pounds)

Food:

More than 20 kinds of alpine bamboo (especially young fleshy stems and buds, bamboo shoots). An adult panda eats about 40kg (88 pounds) fresh bamboo shoot a day, 14kg (about 31 pounds) bamboo stalks, or 20kg (about 44 pounds) bamboo leaves. It has a greater appetite in summer than winter. In the wild, they may eat other plants and occasionally dead or small animals. Their ancestors were true carnivores. About one million years ago, they began to eat bamboo.

Typical body shape of bears; black fur on ears, eye patches, muzzle, legs, arms and shoulders, light brown or grey fur on belly and the rest of the coat is white; tail length from 10 to 20 cm (3.9-7.9 inches); the paw has five digits and a modified sesamoid bone that enables the animal to hold bamboo while chewing it; wiry and shaggy hair on the back and soft and long hair on the belly. Those living in the Qinling Mountain have a rounder head, smaller skull and bigger teeth that make them look cat like. While
Sichuan pandas have a comparatively large and long head, smaller teeth, more closely resembling other bears.

Preferred Habits:

They like cool and wet areas and do not hibernate. They are naturally solitary choosing to live alone. Although they look plump, they are good at climbing trees, which is instinctive of their ancestor for hunting and escaping from dangers. They like water and usually choose to live nearby the streams. They have good eyesight which allows them to see clearly and find food at night.

Territory:

A male giant panda's range of activity is approximately 6-7km in a year and they moved around in half of this range each month. A female's range of activity is 4-5km and they will move around within only 1/10 of their territory. Compared with a yearly activity range of 30km for a black bear, their territory is small.

Timetable:

They spent over half a day searching for food and feeding, over 40% of day for sleeping and only 2% to play. They live alone for most of their life, except one month during the breeding season.

21:00-02:00

night sleep

02:00-07:40

breakfast

07:40-10:30

morning rest

10:30-11:00

play time

11:00-12:00

lunch

12:00-14:30

noon break

14:30-21:00

supper

Mating and Breeding:

In the wild, female pandas are able to reproduce at the age of 6.5, mate and have a baby at the age of 7.5. In capative breeding can commence fall at 3.5 years and produce a baby at 4.5 years. Male ones usually start to mate at 7-8 years old. Pandas are on the rampage when they search for mates, and emit different cries to draw their attention. The breeding season is short, during March to May, and the mating happens in 2-4 days of this period.

Wild female pandas can have 3-4 pregnancies at most, usually one baby each time. They raise cubs alone till they fend for themselves, usually at the age of 1.5 or 2.5 if she does not have new cubs. The pregnancy is usually some 130 days. The possibility of having twin cubs is small. When this happens, they are only capable of raising one. The mothers may leave their cub in a hole or hallow tree as go in search of food for two days or longer. The cubs begin to eat bamboo when they are a year old.

Lifespan:

The average life expectancy of wild giant pandas is 15-20 years while the captive ones can live up to 30 years. Currently, the record age for a captive one is 38 years. Their teenage years are before 5 years old, youth during 5-18 years and old age after 18 years.